Paralyzed Man Able To Stand Again Thanks To Revolutionary Epidural Treatment

This is incredible. After four years of specialized treatment and physical therapy, Andrew regained the ability to move again.

It was a typical day for 28-year-old Andrew “Drew” Meas. He left the gym, climbed on his motorcycle, put on his helmet and was headed home when a driver trying to cross four lanes at once hit him. The news was not good.

“He hit me pretty much head-on,” Meas told The Big Idea. “I was injured at C6-C7 in my back and was told my paralysis was permanent.”

The active man’s life changed drastically in that moment. He could no longer enjoy many of his favorite endeavors.

Six years after his accident, he received exciting news. Researchers at the University of Louisville’s Kentucky Spinal Cord Research Center were working with the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation on an experimental treatment called spinal cord epidural stimulation, or scES. Meas was one of four patients who would receive the treatment.

How Does Epidural Treatment Work?

An epidural stimulator was implanted at the base of Meas’s spine in the hopes that it would mimic the brain signals that initiate movement. The road was long and arduous, but well worth the effort. After four years of scES treatment and physical therapy, Meas regained the ability to move again.

In October 2017, he even became able to stand on his own again.

Meas looks toward the future with excitement.

“You know your body best, more than any scientist,” Meas told Yahoo. “And with this, and the way it makes my body feel, I know I’m going to walk again. I feel it in me.”

Last year, Meas was even able to stand next to his son for a photo on Instagram!